Erythrocyte cation permeability induced by mechanical stress: a model for sickle cell cation loss
- 31 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology
- Vol. 259 (5) , C746-C751
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.1990.259.5.c746
Abstract
Human red blood cells were subjected to mechanical shearing in a Couette viscometer at 37 degrees C, using polyvinylpyrrolidone to increase the medium viscosity. At stresses greater than 300 dyn/cm2, movement of both Na and K down their concentration gradients was observed. The net rate of both monovalent cation fluxes appeared to be linear with applied stress in the range of 300-910 dyn/cm2. The applied shear forces caused no fragmentation of the cells. Observed hemolysis was slight. The observed cation fluxes are not a result of hemolysis because the amount of K released by the hemolyzed cells is quantitatively inadequate to account for the net K efflux, and there is a net uptake of Na by the stressed erythrocytes, which cannot be a consequence of hemolysis. The rates of net Na uptake and K efflux were nearly equal (ratio = 0.93 +/- 0.40, n = 6). The stress-induced permeabilities were reversible when shearing was halted. This work demonstrates the existence of cation permeability inducible in the red cell membrane by mechanical deformation, which may be a model for the sickling-induced monovalent cation exchange observed in deoxygenated sickle cells.This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
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